ANALYZING INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL LOAD FOR ONE ANONYMOUS DIVISION I BASKETBALL TEAM

Electromyography (EMG) is a diagnostic technique that evaluates and measures the electrical activity of skeletal muscles. The resultant amplitude of the muscles can help provide an approximation of internal load or how much work the muscles have done during an exercise period. With the noticeable uptick in the usage of wearable technology that measures external load, most strength and conditioning practitioners, athletic trainers, and other athletic organizational professionals are aware of the usefulness of an external load measurement. While the external load metric is useful in approximating the output of an athlete within an exercise session there is no accounting for the workload felt internally, by the muscles. One popular purpose of measuring external load is to reduce general fatigue and chronic stress. This is a reasonable and strong use case for this data. However, thus far, there has not been a strong biometric that has been able to be used to evaluate the internal results of being aware of the exact external load of every exercise session. Additionally, internal load can aid in completing the evaluation of workload by presenting the workload that was actually felt by the athlete. For example, playing a complete basketball game while well rested has a different longitudinal stress effect on an athlete than playing a complete basketball game while under large amounts of external stress (I.e. poor sleep, relationship problems, etc.). Even if these two competitions were evaluated at the exact same external load, internal load would differentiate the two activities. This paper will demonstrate an analysis of internal and external load metrics throughout a season of a Division I basketball team.

The team collected data for every workout from MONTH A to MONTH B. Figure 1 shows a seven-day rolling team average of both internal and external load. This visual aids in visualizing longitudinal periodization, by showing both the physical output of the training sessions as well as the measurable internal toll that the muscles underwent during this time. In this sense the internal load works as a measuring stick to evaluate the symptoms of stress. While the source of the stress (acute fatigue, chronic fatigue, sleep quality, relationship stress, etc.) is not immediately available, being aware of the symptoms alerts teams to the presence of fatigue and can in some instances aid in determining the cause. For example, unusually high external loads from immediate days prior could indicate acute fatigue, while a look at the trend of the workload like Figure 1 could portray indicators of chronic fatigue. Additional tools can also aid in determining the cause of stress such as questionnaires or sleep monitoring technologies. But the importance of measuring internal muscle load cannot be overstated, in that it provides a measurement that can detect fatigue.

This NCAA basketball team was able to use internal and external loads to evaluate their game preparation. The scatter plot in Figure 2 displays a clear differentiation of game days, “game day minus ones,” and “game day minus twos.” External or traditional player load is on the y-axis. Using only the y-axis, one can clearly see the difference in the game loads and the loads the day before the game. This is to be expected. The day immediately prior to the game is traditionally used as a walk-through day, and is not meant to be near the external load of a game. The practices that would be hard to differentiate and evaluate in a wholistic fashion are the “game day minus two” practices. Figure 2 displays how most of the practices fall between the game external load and the “game day minus one” traditional load. However, they are not the same. There are many “-2” practices that have a higher internal load measurement. This can be determined as good or bad dependent upon the team’s training professionals while considering the added context like the outcome of the game or the trend of the following activities fatigue ratio. This number is also highly dependent upon what is measured during activities. If a “lift” is measured, a higher internal load should be expected as opposed to the external load of the day’s activities. As long as the activities being measured are consistent and the context is always taken into account, the trends can be analyzed with great confidence. A scatter plot like Figure 2 can aid in spotting outliers and help conceptualize the real difficulty of each practice in reference to every other activity the team has completed.

One other way internal and external load can be analyzed is to explore the effect that travel stress has on an organization. While examining Figure 2, this organization noticed that some of the higher internal loads from games were obtained when the team had to take its longest road trips, or when the opponent’s arena had extraordinarily tougher playing conditions than that of a regular away game. Figure 3 shows how this collegiate basketball team’s efficiency ratio (external load divided by internal load) was affected by playing away games versus playing home games. Exploring this data can be tricky because context is always important.

Collegiate basketball ranks games into four quadrants. Quad one being the hardest, quad two being the second hardest, quad three bring the third hardest, and quad four being the easiest. It was important to differentiate the competition being faced because a game being played against easier opponents may not require a team’s most intense effort. Additionally, the pace of the game, or how many possessions there are throughout the course of the game have an effect as well. Figure 3 takes the efficiency ratio and divides by the number of possessions and multiplied by 100 in order to account for different pace. Even this does not eliminate all context, but it does help to provide an idea of the effect that travel has on the team. This is data from here the season split into four different categories, so the sample size is considerably too small in order to make any blanket statements on findings for the general basketball world. However, this team can use this in order to compare general games to an average that includes added context. Indeed, in most cases, the away games did average higher than the home games when facing similar strength of opponents.

STRIVE Analyzing Internal and External Load 1

Figure 1 This figure displays game day preparation represented by external (TPL) and Internal (IPL) player load from 2 and 1 days prior to competition.

STRIVE Analyzing Internal and External Load 2

Figure 2 “Efficiency” measurement (external to internal load ratio) provides insight on the effect that home and away games have on a team from a physiological standpoint.

STRIVE Analyzing Internal and External Load 3

Figure 3 displays the longitudinal rolling seven-day team average internal and external load throughout the course of the season.

WHITE PAPERS & CASE STUDIES

If you’re looking to dive deeper into the STRIVE Platform, review the literature below illustrating various use cases and research. 

PURPOSE
Understanding game workloads allow coaches better insight into the demands of Women’s Basketball at the NCAA D1 Level. Coaches look to prescribe training loads in the gym and on the court through progressions that appropriately prepare athletes to perform during matches. Most team sport that require demands of intermittent exercise include the ability to perform through high-intensity bouts of high-speed running. The purpose of this case study was to capture, analyze and visually prepare data to better understand sprinting demands of Division 1 Collegiate Women’s Basketball. 

BACKGROUND
Strive is a performance tracking wearable technology system seamlessly integrated into compression shorts for both female and male athletes utilize in all training settings. The garments are comfortable, can be embedded in whatever brand the team desires, and…

DESCRIPTION
Tracking metrics like speed, distance and accelerations can reveal patterns in practices and games that allow coaching staff to make adjustments.  In addition to those metrics, one team wanted to understand the amount of effort players exerted throughout a week leading up to a game. The team employed STRIVE to track both the external metrics as well as the muscle EMG activity.

RESULTS
STRIVE worked with the team to analyze the results and found an interesting early correlation: The overall fatigue of the team, which compared how hard the muscles worked to produce the accelerations, directly correlated with the how well the team performed in the game. Essentially, the team performed below their potential when the players approached fatigue the week leading up to a game.

MONITORING INTENSITY OF GAME VS. PRACTICE

DESCRIPTION
How can coaches structure their weekly practices to better prepare for a game? One team wanted to replicate drills that produced similar game-time intensity that would allow them to structure their practices to optimize performance.  With the help of STRIVE, they collected millions of data points across jumps, distance and accelerations to see what insights they could capture before games.

RESULTS
By analyzing the practices and non-conference games at the start of the season, the team identified how the opponent’s style of play impacted their player’s metrics. Using this information, the team made adjustments to their weekly practice schedule in an effort to get the same results in practice as on game day.

CHANGES IN PLAYER LOAD? SYSTEMS INTERROGATION

ABSTRACT
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the use and utility of Sense3, a sensor system embedded in compression shorts that measure kinematic changes, muscle activation and physiology in elite athletes.

THE PROBLEM
Elite sports teams have been monitoring athlete loads through wearable technology for close to 10 years, yet most leagues and teams have yet to see a quantifiable reduction in athlete injury or a significant change in performance-based outputs. In many cases, the technologies provide a singular load metric “score” indicating a difference from game to game- or practice sessions. Practitioners are left to make “inferences” on why the score changed, without forming a direct rationale as to which biological system…

RETURN-TO-PLAY – INTERNAL VS EXTERNAL LOAD

DESCRIPTION
As the player started return-to-play protocol, the team asked STRIVE  to re-assess his efficiency. The goal was to replicate the pre-injury practice session and identify any significant changes that could impact his recovery.

RESULTS
Before the injury, the player was found very efficient likely due to his conditioning to recovery balance. When STRIVE re-assessed the player post-injury, it showed that the internal load drastically increased even though the external load stayed consistent causing his efficiency to decrease nearly 40%.

USING STRIVE TO ASSESS RETURN TO PLAY FOR NFL PLAYERS

DESCRIPTION
There are an average of 176 hamstring injuries each season in the NFL. Once a player sustains an injury, they are more prone to re injuring the same muscle. Players with hamstring injuries miss an average of 13 days depending on the severity.  While practicing return-to-play protocol for hamstring injuries, one NFL team used STRIVE. Taking into account body composition, position, left vs. right dominance and previous injuries, STRIVE discovered how certain exercises affect specific muscle groups differently on individual players.

RESULTS
With this finding, the team worked collaboratively with strength coaches, athletic…

STRIVE'S CAPTURES REPETITIONS OF 400 METERS, ALL APPROXIMATELY 90 SECONDS

INTRODUCTION
Currently, athletic organizations relate “Player Load” as a metric of output. IMU tech measures the output of an athlete’s session and then a load is provided for use in comparison with the athlete’s body of data to detect longitudinal trends and outliers. This number is then used as insight into how hard a session was for an athlete in relation to all other sessions, and sometimes even used as an injury risk indicator.  In reality, the term Player Load is much broader than a simple movement score provided by an accelerometer. The amount of stress that an athlete’s body is under, influences the difficulty of a session. A movement score is not without value, and it plays an important role in the idea of a player’s load. However, there is additional context that is needed to fill out the picture that is true Player Load.

ANALYZING INTERNAL & EXTERNAL LOAD IN DIVISION I NCAA BASKETBALL TEAM

DESCRIPTION
Electromyography (EMG) is a diagnostic technique that evaluates and measures the electrical activity of skeletal muscles. The resultant amplitude of the muscles can help provide an approximation of internal load or how much work the muscles have done during an exercise period. With the noticeable uptick in the usage of wearable technology that measures external load, most strength and conditioning practitioners, athletic trainers, and other athletic organizational professionals are aware of the usefulness of an external load measurement. While the external load metric is useful in approximating the output of an athlete within an exercise session there is no accounting for the workload felt internally, by the muscles. One popular purpose of measuring external load is to reduce general fatigue and chronic stress. This is a reasonable…

VISUALIZING PERIODIZATION AND ITS EFFECTS ON AN IMBALANCE OF MUSCLE INPUT TO OUTPUT RATIO

INTRODUCTION
Periodization in sport is important. Seasons can be long and grueling, and an organization always needs to be aware of the fatigue status of its athletes. With the influx of wearable tech, the increasingly common way to monitor load status in athletes is to obtain an external load metric (traditional player load) and monitor it over the course of a season. This has worked well for visualizing periodization of athlete training. With an external workload quantified, teams now have a better idea of what a “normal” external workload is at an individual athlete level or a more general team level. This is a good start but is missing a key piece of information. When measuring external load…

EFFECTS OF FATIGUE ON INDIVIDUAL’S PERFORMANCE AND MUSCLE COMPENSATION

INTRODUCTION
Fatigue is the key driver in exposing weaknesses and deficiencies in athletes’ performance. Traditional methods have been inadequate in location weakness points and ensuing compensation when athletes enter fatigue stages. To mitigate further injuries, coaches have been working with players strengthening their muscles in symmetric ways, whether left to right, or posterior and anterior. To understand this better, we will look at the athlete who conducted six extensive drills as a part of a daily workout. In this example, we will discuss how fatigue affects this athlete and his muscle response during the compensation.

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